The AF-1 Domain of the Orphan Nuclear Receptor NOR-1 Mediates Trans-activation, Coactivator Recruitment, and Activation by the Purine Anti-metabolite 6-Mercaptopurine
pmid: 12709428
The AF-1 Domain of the Orphan Nuclear Receptor NOR-1 Mediates Trans-activation, Coactivator Recruitment, and Activation by the Purine Anti-metabolite 6-Mercaptopurine
NOR-1/NR4A3 is an "orphan member" of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily. NOR-1 and its close relatives Nurr1 and Nur77 are members of the NR4A subgroup of nuclear receptors. Members of the NR4A subgroup are induced through multiple signal transduction pathways. They have been implicated in cell proliferation, differentiation, T-cell apoptosis, chondrosarcomas, neurological disorders, inflammation, and atherogenesis. However, the mechanism of transcriptional activation, coactivator recruitment, and agonist-mediated activation remain obscure. Hence, we examined the molecular basis of NOR-1-mediated activation. We observed that NOR-1 trans-activates gene expression in a cell- and target-specific manner; moreover, it operates in an activation function (AF)-1-dependent manner. The N-terminal AF-1 domain delimited to between amino acids 1 and 112, preferentially recruits the steroid receptor coactivator (SRC). Furthermore, SRC-2 modulates the activity of the AF-1 domain but not the C-terminal ligand binding domain (LBD). Homology modeling indicated that the NOR-1 LBD was substantially different from that of hRORbeta, a closely related AF-2-dependent receptor. In particular, the hydrophobic cleft characteristic of nuclear receptors was replaced with a very hydrophilic surface with a distinct topology. This observation may account for the inability of this nuclear receptor LBD to efficiently mediate cofactor recruitment and transcriptional activation. In contrast, the N-terminal AF-1 is necessary for cofactor recruitment and can independently conscript coactivators. Finally, we demonstrate that the purine anti-metabolite 6-mercaptopurine, a widely used antineoplastic and anti-inflammatory drug, activates NOR-1 in an AF-1-dependent manner. Additional 6-mercaptopurine analogs all efficiently activated NOR-1, suggesting that the signaling pathways that modulate proliferation via inhibition of de novo purine and/or nucleic acid biosynthesis are involved in the regulation NR4A activity. We hypothesize that the NR4A subgroup mediates the genotoxic stress response and suggest that this subgroup may function as sensors that respond to genotoxicity.
- University of Queensland Australia
- Queensland University of Technology Australia
- University of Queensland Australia
- University of Queensland Australia
Transcriptional Activation, 570, Receptors, Steroid, 270104 Membrane Biology, Antimetabolites, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Ligand-binding Domain, Mice, C1, Steroid-receptor, Animals, Serum Growth-factors, Gene-expression, Receptors, Thyroid Hormone, Mercaptopurine, Nurr1/nur77 Subfamily, Pituitary-adrenal Axis, 730108 Cancer and related disorders, Muscle Differentiation, Protein Structure, Tertiary, DNA-Binding Proteins, T-cell Apoptosis, Ngfi-b, Transcriptional Activity, COS Cells, Cell Division, Signal Transduction
Transcriptional Activation, 570, Receptors, Steroid, 270104 Membrane Biology, Antimetabolites, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Ligand-binding Domain, Mice, C1, Steroid-receptor, Animals, Serum Growth-factors, Gene-expression, Receptors, Thyroid Hormone, Mercaptopurine, Nurr1/nur77 Subfamily, Pituitary-adrenal Axis, 730108 Cancer and related disorders, Muscle Differentiation, Protein Structure, Tertiary, DNA-Binding Proteins, T-cell Apoptosis, Ngfi-b, Transcriptional Activity, COS Cells, Cell Division, Signal Transduction
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